GB2151074A - Colour display tube and display device comprising such a colour display tube - Google Patents

Colour display tube and display device comprising such a colour display tube Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2151074A
GB2151074A GB08430479A GB8430479A GB2151074A GB 2151074 A GB2151074 A GB 2151074A GB 08430479 A GB08430479 A GB 08430479A GB 8430479 A GB8430479 A GB 8430479A GB 2151074 A GB2151074 A GB 2151074A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
display
skirt
display window
tube
colour
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB08430479A
Other versions
GB8430479D0 (en
GB2151074B (en
Inventor
Gijsbertus Bakker
Gerhardus Johannes Rorije
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Koninklijke Philips NV
Original Assignee
Philips Gloeilampenfabrieken NV
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Philips Gloeilampenfabrieken NV filed Critical Philips Gloeilampenfabrieken NV
Publication of GB8430479D0 publication Critical patent/GB8430479D0/en
Publication of GB2151074A publication Critical patent/GB2151074A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2151074B publication Critical patent/GB2151074B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J29/00Details of cathode-ray tubes or of electron-beam tubes of the types covered by group H01J31/00
    • H01J29/86Vessels; Containers; Vacuum locks
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J29/00Details of cathode-ray tubes or of electron-beam tubes of the types covered by group H01J31/00
    • H01J29/02Electrodes; Screens; Mounting, supporting, spacing or insulating thereof
    • H01J29/06Screens for shielding; Masks interposed in the electron stream
    • H01J29/07Shadow masks for colour television tubes
    • H01J29/073Mounting arrangements associated with shadow masks

Description

1 GB 2151 074A 1
SPECIFICATION
Colour display tube and display device comprising such a colour display tube The present invention relates to a colour dis play tube and to a display device comprising such a display tube. A known display tube comprises an envelope consisting of a neck, a cone and a flat or slightly convex display window which changes into a skirt which is substantially parallel to the axis of the envel ope via a strongly curved part, the inner surface of the display window changing into the inner surface of said skirt via a first 80 strongly curved surface having a radius of curvature rand the outer surface of the dis play window changing into the outer surface of said skirt via a second strongly curved surface, the skirt, in the proximity of said transition, having a thickness d. The display window further compriseon its inside a sub stantially rectangular display screen which comprises a material luminescing in at least one colour, colour selection means positioned in front of said display screen by means of suspension means fixed in the skirt, and means in said neck to generate at least one electron beam.
Recent developments of display tubes go more and more towards flatter display win dows, as described for example, in journal of Electronic Engineering, August 1982, p. 24.
In said publication it concerns a colour display tube having a substantially rectangular display screen, in which, however, the outer contour of the display window is slightly barrel shaped.
In colour display tubes it is usual to fix the suspension means for the colour selection means in the long and short sides of the skirt of the display window. The suspension means usually consist of metal pins which are sealed in the skirt and which each extend in associ ated apertures of metal resilient strips con nected to the colour selection means. The metal strips are corn ected to a skirt of the colour selection means which also extend sub stantially parallel to the axis of the envelope.
It will be obvious that for such a suspension construction a relatively large space is neces sary between the skirt of the display window and the skirt of the colour selection means.
For this reason, the inner contour of the skirt of the display window is constructed so as to be slightly more barrel-shaped than the con tour of the skirt of the colour selection means.
For tubes which are placed in a cabinet and the outer circumference of which is screened from the viewer by a fillet, this need not be an objection because the inner edge of the fillet may adjoin the edge of the display screen.
However, for tubes the display window of which projects slightly beond the cabinet (so called push-through mounting) so that the 130 fillet can not in consequence be used, the substantially rectangular display screen on the im er wall of the much less rectangular display window leads to dark areas above and below and on the left and on the right of the display picture, which areas vary in width and are annoying to the viewer. This undesired effect is even more intensified by the fact that the outer contour of the display window and hence the outer contour of the skirt of the display window, in itself is constructed to be more barrel-shaped than the inner contour of the skirt of the display window. This design is assumed to be necessary in connection with the stringent requirements as regards implosion safety for the tube.
It is the object of the invention to provide a display tube which is particularly suitable for push-through mounting and which does not exhibit the abovementioned annoying dark areas.
According to the present invention there is provided a colour display tube comprising an envelope consisting of a neck, a cone and a flat or slightly curved display window which changes into a skirt which is substantially parallel to the axis of the tube via a strongly curved part, the display window comprising on its inside a substantially rectangular display screen which comprises a material luminescing in at least one colour, the display tube further comprising colour selection means positioned in front of said display screen by means of suspension means fixed in the cor- ners of the skirt, and means provided in said neck to generate at least one electron beam, wherein the inner surface of the display window changes into the inner surface of the said skirt via a first strongly curved surface having a radius of curvature r and the outer surface of the display window changes into the outer surface of said skirt via a second strongly curved surface, the skirt, in the proximity of said transition, having a thickness d, the dis- tance D in a plane perpendicular to the tube axis between the boundary of the luminescent material of the display screen and the outer surface of the skirt of the display window is substantially the same around the periphery of the window and wherein for r ---- 10 mm the following condition is satisfied [(D - d)/r]-,.--1.
In the display tube made in accordance with the invention only a narrow dark edge which has substantially the same width nearly everywhere is obtained around the rectangular display screen which still emphasizes the rectangularity of the display screen. Moreover said narrow dark edge which has substantially the same width nearly everywhere, in an operating tube leads to a picture presentation which is attractive to the viewer. Notably, said edge does not lead to a perceptive distortion of, for example, a number of straight columns of digits displayed on the display screen. In a non-operating tube the narrow edge around 2 GB 2 151 074A 2 the display screen which has substantially the same width everywhere results in an aesthetic design. Experiments and comparative calcula tions have moreover demonstrated that a dis play window having a substantially rectangu lar outer contour does not lose implosion safety both under static and dynamic loads as compared with the known tube which has a substantially flat display window and a barrel shaped contour.
The invention advantageously uses the lar ger space which is present in the four corners of the display screen between the skirt of the display window and the skirt of the colour selection means. With a substantially rectan- 80 gular inner contour of the display window and a substantially rectangular contour of the skirt of the colour selection means, the gain in space is at least a factor -,/2 with respect to the centres of the sides of the said rectangles. 85 By using the display tube made in accordance with the invention said gain in space can be effectively used in that the boundary of the luminescent material of the display screen, in contrast with the known display tube, may extend along the inner contour of the display window. In this manner an optimum size of the display screen on the display window is obtained. This is of importance for tubes hav ing black matrix material between the ele ments of luminescent material of the display screen, said matrix material extending to be yond the boundary of the luminescent ma terial of the display screen. However, this is also of importance for tubes without said matrix material in which an aluminium film (-metal backing-) is provided over the lumi nescent material so as to extend to beyond the boundary of the luminescent material. As a matter of fact, in the former case a wide 105 non-uniform dark edge is formed without us ing the invention and in the latter case a shiny non-uniform edge (aluminium) surrounded by a dark edge caused by the skirt of the display window is formed.
The importance of, and the need for, a suspension of the colour selection means in the corners of the display window is also relevant in display tubes having a substan tially flat display window, that is having a large radius of curvature of the display win dow. As a matter of fact, in the case of flatter display windows, the colour selection means which are placed, for example, in the form of a shadow mask plate at a short distance before the display screen, would have to be constructed so as to be flatter. Temperature differences which may occur during operation of the tube over the surface of the shadow mask and which result in a local or complete bulging of the shadow mask, in flatter shadow masks will lead to coarser colour defects in the displayed picture. With respect to the mechanical rigidity in a suspension of the Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a prior art
6 5 shadow mask from the centre of the sides, the 130 television set. A display tube having a display skirt of the shadow mask is connected to a supporting frame of thicker sheet material than the mask itself. Said supporting frame also forms a diaphragm to prevent reflections of electrons at the skirt of the shadow mask. This in itself sooner results in temperature differences between the skirt of the shadow mask and the shadow mask itself. By using the invention, however, the thickness of said diaphragm can be adapted to that of the shadow mask itself because the mechanical rigidity of the shadow mask in the corners is sufficiently large to be able to realize a suspension in those places.
It is to be noted that for this latter reason it is known per se to suspend the colour selection means in the corners of the display window.
An additional advantage of the suspension of the colour selection means in the corners of the display window is that the suspension construction itself can be constructed with simple means. It is known to compensate for the thermal expansion of the shadow mask by means of a displacement of the shadow mask in the direction of the display screen. For that purpose it is conventional to suspend the shadow mask from the pins sealed in the skirt of the display window by means of bimetallic elements. In a suspension in the corners said bimetallic elements may be replaced by simple metal strips the longitudinal direction of which in each corner is substantially perpendicularly to the electron beam deflected to- wards said corner.
The invention will now be explained and described in greater detail, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a prior art television set having a fillet around the display screen,
Fig. 2 shows a prior art set without a fillet but with push-through mounting of the dis- play tube, Fig. 3 is a front elevation of the display tube of the set shown in Fig. 2, Fig. 4 is a front elevation of a display tube made in accordance with the invention, Fig. 5 is a cross-sectional view of a part of the edge and the skirt of the display window of the display tube shown in Fig. 4, Fig. 6 is a rear view of a prior art display window in which a shadow mask is sus- pended from pins sealed to the centres of the sides, Fig. 7 is a rear view of a display window made in accordance with the invention in which a shadow mask is suspended in the corners of the display window, and Fig. 8 is a perspective view of a suspension construction in a corner of the display window.
3 GB 2 151 074A 3 window 1 is connected in a cabinet 2 by means of suspension means not shown. Said tube comprises a substantially rectangular dis play screen on the inner wall of the much less rectangular display window 1 which has a slightly barrel-shaped outer contour 3. As a result of this a dark edge 7, 7' which varies in width is formed around the display screen 6 and is covered by a fillet 4. The inner edge 4' of said fillet to the viewer forms the visual boundary of the luminescent material of the display screen 6 on the inner wall of the display window 1.
Fig. 2 is a perspective view of a television set in which a display tube of the type as used in the Figure 1 set is used. In this set the display window 1 slightly projects from the cabinet 2. This is the so-called push through mounting of the display tube. In this manner of tube mounting the use of the fillet 85 4 described with reference to Figure 1 is not possible. The substantially rectangular display screen 6 on the inner wall of the much less rectangular display window 1 bounded by the broken line 5 leads to dark or shiny areas 7, 90 7' above and below and on the left and on the right of the displayed picture, which areas vary in width and are annoying to the viewer.
The areas 7 and 7' are dark in the case of a matrix tube and are partly shiny (area 71) in the case of a tube in which no matrix material is used because the aluminium present be yond the boundary of the luminescent ma terial is visible to the viewer. This is shown more clearly in Fig. 3 which is a front eleva tion of the tube as is used in the Fig. 2 set. In a tube having an outer diagonal of the display window of 51 cm the distance from the boundary 5 of the display screen 6 (broken line in the figure) to the outer contour 3 of the 105 display window in the diagonal direction was 18.3 mm (indicated by an arrow a) and on the centres of the long and short sides it was 26.6 mm (denoted by an arrow b) and 23.8 mm (denoted by an arrow c), respectively.
Fig. 4 is a front elevation of a display tube made in accordance with the invention in which the outer contour 8 of the display window 9 is substantially parallel to the boun- dary 10 of the luminescent material of the display screen 11. As a result of this a dark edge 11 which is uniform in width is obtained around the substantially rectangular display screen 11.
The values of a, b and c defined in a manner corresponding to that of Fig. 3 are 19.5 and 20.9 and 20.0 mm, respectively. In the tube made in accordance with the invention the variation in width of the dark edge is less than 1.5 mm, which is substantially not observable. In the known tube said variation is well over 8 mm, which causes perceptively an annoying effect. The sides of the outer contour 8 have a radius of curvature of approximately 6.5 m.
Fig. 5 is a cross-sectional view of a part of the edge and skirt 63 of the display window 9 of the display tube shown in fig. 4. The inner surface 64 of the display window 9 changes into the inner surface 66 of the skirt 63 via a strongly curved surface 65 having a radius of curvature r. The radius of curvature r of the strongly curved surface 65 is between 3 and 10 mm and in this case is approximately 8 mm. The distance between the boundary 10 of the luminescent material of the display screen 11 and the outer surface of the skirt 63 is denoted by D and in this case was 20.0 mm, while the thickness of the skirt 63 de- noted by d is approximately 14.5 mm. As a generality when r -,< 10 mm then the following condition is satisfied, namely [(D - d)/r]----; 1. The usual thin aluminium film, not shown, is vapour-deposited over the luminescent material of the display screen 11. As a result of the small radius of curvature of the strongly curved surface 65 and the extension of the luminescent material of the display screen 11, the aluminium film is visible only in the form of a very narrow edge from the front of the tube. In the case of a matrix tube the part of the aluminium film extending beyond the boundary 10 is concealed from the viewer's eye by black matrix material. It may be seen from Fig. 4 that in that case the dark edge 12 becomes wider only to a very small extent.
Fig. 6 is a rear view of a prior art display window 1 in which colour selection means in the form of a shadow mask 13 are suspended from metal pins 14 sealed in the centres of the sides of the display window 1. The shadow mask 13 comprises a skirt 15 to which resilient bimetallic strips 16 are welded each having at their free ends 17 an aperture 18 through which the metal pin 14 extends. As a result of the space required for said suspension construction between the skirt 15 of the shadow mask 13 and the skirt of the display window 1, the dark or shiny areas 7' which vary in width and are shown in fig. 3 are formed because the rectangular boundary 5 of the luminescent material of the display screen 6 cannot be provided sufficiently closely along the inner contour 20 of the display window 1. By placing the suspension means in the corner of the display window an optimum size of the display screen on the display window can be realised. Such a construction is shown diagrammatically in Fig. 7 which is a rear view of the display window shown in Fig. 4.
Fig. 8 is a perspective view of one suspension construction by which the suspension construction shown diagrammatically in Fig. 7 can be realised, the suspension construction being disclosed in Netherlands Patent Application 83 02 182. A metal pin 50 is sealed in each corner of the skirt 23 of the display window 9. A mandrel 51 which has a conical cam 52 is present at the free end of the pin 4 GB 2 151 074A 4 50. The colour selection means are formed by a thin shadow mask 40 which has a large number of apertures 42 and comprises a skirt 41. A diaphragm 39, shown in broken lines, which prevents reflections of electrons at the skirt 41, is connected to the skirt 41. In order to avoid differences in expansion between the mask 40 and the diaphragm 39, both are manufactured from the same material and in approximately the same thickness (1 5Ogm). A supporting strip having two lugs 37 is connected in the corner of the diaphragm 39. A thin flat resilient element 25 is connected to the lugs 37 via two narrow lugs 21. The flat element 25 comprises bent-over edges 26 which reinforce it inthe longitudinal direction. The flat element moreover is substantially perpendicular to the electron beam deflected towards the corner in question. With a ther- mal expansion of the shadow mask 40, only the lugs 21 bend though. The remaining part of the element 25 remains flat so that the element 25 substantially pivots about the end connected to the lugs 37. Near the end remote from the supporting strip 24 a slotshaped aperture 27 is provided in the flat resilient element 25. Said aperture 27 is covered partly by means of a plate 28 which has an aperture 29 and is connected to the element 25. The function of the plate 28 will be described in detail hereinafter. Beside the slot-shaped aperture 27 in the flat resilient element 25 two apertures 30 and 31 are present through which the bent- over ends 32 and 33 of a wire spring 34 shown only partly in the Figure extend. The other end 35 of the wire spring 34 is clamped against a bent-over lug 36 which is connected to the supporting strip 24. In this manner the wire spring 34 is connected so as to be tensioned between the supporting strip 24 and the end of the flat resilient element 25 remote from the supporting strip 24. The wire spring 34 further is entirely free from the flat resilient element 25. The supporting strip 24 furthermore comprises an abutment not visible in the drawing which limits the pivoting movement in the direction of the arrow 60 of the flat resilient element 25.
The shadow mask 40 is suspended in the display window by placing the resilient elements 25 with the plate 28 with their apertures 29 on the conical cams 52 of the pins 50. The position of the shadow mask 40 with respect to the display window 9 is entirely fixed in this manner by the flat resilient elements 25. The pin 50 is substantially perpendicular to the plane of the resilient element 25 which is urged on the pin 50 by the tensioned wire spring. The wire spring 34 ensures that the resilient element 25 after the occurrence of vibrations always again assumes the same position on the cam 52 of the pin 50. The apertures 30 and 31 in which the bent-over ends 32 and 33 of the wire spring 34 are hooked are in one line with the centre of the aperture 27. The point of engagement of the tensile forces of the wire spring 34 hence coincides with the axis of the cam 52 so that the wire spring 54 cannot exert a moment on the flat resilient element 25 as a result of which the position of the element 25 might vary with respect to the cam 52. The flat resilient element 25 is connected at such an angle to the shadow mask 40 that it is substantially perpendicular to the electron beams deflected towards the corner of the display window 9. When the shadow mask 40 expands a smaller distance is necessary between the shadow mask 40 and the display window 9 to keep a colour-pure picture. Since the flat resilient elements 25 are connected to the shadow mask 40 so as to be substantially pivotable, the latter will move in a direction towards the display screen in the case of expansion. The plate 28 serves to compensate for possible tolerances in the position of the pins 50. Each plate 28 comprises two notches 38 through which the bent-over ends 32 and 33 of the wire spring 34 extend. The bentover ends 32 and 33 of the wire spring 34 journal the plate 28 so that the aperture 29 is kept at the correct height with respect to the slot-shaped aperture 27 in the flat resilient element 25 and the plate 28 can be moved with respect to the flat resilient element 25. After placing the plates 27 on the cams 52, they are connected to the resilient elements 25. As a result of this it is effected that the position of the aperture 29 corresponds accurately with the position of the conical skirt 52. When no loose plates 28 are used, deformation of the shadow mask 40 may occur as a result of differences in the position of the cams 52 and the apertures 27 in the flat resilient elements 25. After the mask ring 23 with the resilient elements 25 has been suspended in the display window 9 in the abovedescribed manner, the mask 40 is laid in the display window 9 with the interposition of a spacing jig after which the diaphragm 23 is welded to the skirt 41 of the mask 40.
After the display window 9 has been provided in the above-described manner with a shadow mask to match, said display window is provided with a display screen 11 in the conventional manner. By using the display tube made in accordance with the invention the space between the skirt 23 of the display window 9 and the skirt 41 of the shadow mask 40 may be chosen to be smaller than in the tubes known so far. As a result of this it is possible to make the inner contour 43 of the display window substantially rectangular and to cause the rectangular boundary 10 of the luminescent material of the display screen to extend substantially parallel and at a short distance from the inner contour 43. Said inner contour is formed by a line of points where the inner surface 45 of the window 9 GB 2 151 074A 5 changes into a strongly curved surface 44 having a radius of curvature between 3 and 10 mm. The boundary 10 of the luminescent material of the display screen 11 coincides or coincides substantially with said inner contour.
It will be obvious that the invention is not restricted to the embodiment of the suspension construction of the shadow mask de- scribed in Netherlands Patent Application 81 02 182. Other suspension constructions such as those describedfor example in Netherlands Patent Applications 80 04 173; 80 03 611 and 80 03 609 may also be used.
For further information reference is made to the Netherlands Patent Applications 83 04 178; 83 04 180 and 83 04 181.

Claims (3)

1. A colour display tube comprising an envelope consisting of a neck, a cone and a flat or slightly curved display window which changes into a skirt which is substantially parallel to the axis of the envelope via a strongly curved part, the display window comprising on its inside a substantially rectangular display screen which comprises a material luminescing in at least one colour, the display tube further comprising colour selection means positioned in front of said display screen by means of suspension means fixed in the corners of the skirt, and means provided in said neck to generate at least one electron beam, wherein the inner surface of the display window changes into the inner surface of the said skirt via a first strongly curved surface having a radius of curvature rand the outer surface of the display window changes into the outer surface of said skirt via a second strongly curved surface, the skirt, in the proximity of said transition, having a thickness d, the distance D in a plane perpendicular to the tube axis between the boundary of the luminescent material of the display screen and the outer surface of the skirt of the display window is substantially the same around the periphery of the window and wherein for r 10 mm the following condition is satisfied [(D - d)/r]:!51.
2. A colour display tube constructed and arranged to operate substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to and as shown in Figures 4, 5, 7 and 8 of the accompanying drawings.
3. A display device comprising a colour display tube as claimed in Claim 1 or 2.
Printed in the United Kingdom for Her Majesty's Stationery Office. Dd 8818935. 1985. 4235Published at The Patent Office. 25 Southampton Buildings, London, WC2A lAY, from which copies may be obtained-
GB08430479A 1983-12-06 1984-12-03 Colour display tube and display device comprising such a colour display tube Expired GB2151074B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
NL8304179A NL8304179A (en) 1983-12-06 1983-12-06 COLOR IMAGE TUBE AND DISPLAY EQUIPPED WITH SUCH A COLOR IMAGE TUBE.

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB8430479D0 GB8430479D0 (en) 1985-01-09
GB2151074A true GB2151074A (en) 1985-07-10
GB2151074B GB2151074B (en) 1987-05-07

Family

ID=19842831

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB08430479A Expired GB2151074B (en) 1983-12-06 1984-12-03 Colour display tube and display device comprising such a colour display tube

Country Status (10)

Country Link
US (1) US4639636A (en)
JP (1) JPH0646548B2 (en)
KR (1) KR940007038B1 (en)
CA (1) CA1220809A (en)
DE (1) DE3443497C2 (en)
ES (1) ES538207A0 (en)
FR (1) FR2556129B1 (en)
GB (1) GB2151074B (en)
IT (1) IT1178679B (en)
NL (1) NL8304179A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5568011A (en) * 1995-02-15 1996-10-22 Thomson Consumer Electronics, Inc. Color picture tube faceplate panel

Families Citing this family (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0387738A1 (en) * 1989-03-13 1990-09-19 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Flat panel display device
USRE38450E1 (en) 1997-02-06 2004-03-02 Asahi Glass Company, Ltd. Glass panel for a cathode ray tube
US5982085A (en) * 1997-12-23 1999-11-09 Philips Electronics North America Corporation Color cathode ray tube with improved shadow mask mounting system
GB9905830D0 (en) * 1998-03-26 1999-05-05 Asahi Glass Co Ltd Glass panel for an implosion-protected type cathode ray tube

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1470344A (en) * 1973-06-14 1977-04-14 Philips Electronic Associated Colour television display tube
GB1535446A (en) * 1975-12-23 1978-12-13 Philips Electronic Associated Cathode ray colour tube
GB2136200A (en) * 1983-02-25 1984-09-12 Rca Corp Cathode-ray tube shadow mask contour

Family Cites Families (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3089052A (en) * 1960-03-10 1963-05-07 Philco Corp Cathode ray tube faceplate construction
GB1358161A (en) * 1970-06-11 1974-06-26 Pilkington Brothers Ltd Cathode ray tubes
FR2204038B2 (en) * 1972-10-25 1978-03-03 France Couleur Ste
JPS5550337B2 (en) * 1973-05-21 1980-12-17
CA1065003A (en) * 1975-05-05 1979-10-23 Albert M. Morrell Cathode ray tube having improved line-screen structure
JPS5210768U (en) * 1975-07-11 1977-01-25
JPS5311569A (en) * 1976-07-19 1978-02-02 Mitsubishi Electric Corp Stripe-type color picture tube
JPS6015243Y2 (en) * 1976-09-25 1985-05-14 三菱電機株式会社 color picture tube
NL7907596A (en) * 1979-10-15 1981-04-21 Philips Nv COLOR TELEVISION PICTURE TUBE.
NL8004173A (en) * 1980-07-21 1982-02-16 Philips Nv COLOR IMAGE TUBE.
NL8004174A (en) * 1980-07-21 1982-02-16 Philips Nv COLOR IMAGE TUBE.
NL8102182A (en) * 1981-05-04 1982-12-01 Philips Nv COLOR IMAGE TUBE.

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1470344A (en) * 1973-06-14 1977-04-14 Philips Electronic Associated Colour television display tube
GB1535446A (en) * 1975-12-23 1978-12-13 Philips Electronic Associated Cathode ray colour tube
GB2136200A (en) * 1983-02-25 1984-09-12 Rca Corp Cathode-ray tube shadow mask contour

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5568011A (en) * 1995-02-15 1996-10-22 Thomson Consumer Electronics, Inc. Color picture tube faceplate panel

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
NL8304179A (en) 1985-07-01
ES8604006A1 (en) 1986-01-01
IT8423858A0 (en) 1984-12-03
ES538207A0 (en) 1986-01-01
GB8430479D0 (en) 1985-01-09
CA1220809A (en) 1987-04-21
JPS60124336A (en) 1985-07-03
GB2151074B (en) 1987-05-07
FR2556129A1 (en) 1985-06-07
KR850004348A (en) 1985-07-11
KR940007038B1 (en) 1994-08-03
FR2556129B1 (en) 1988-07-08
DE3443497C2 (en) 1997-11-20
US4639636A (en) 1987-01-27
IT8423858A1 (en) 1986-06-03
IT1178679B (en) 1987-09-16
DE3443497A1 (en) 1985-06-20
JPH0646548B2 (en) 1994-06-15

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3308327A (en) Cathode ray tube
US4056755A (en) Color picture tube having mask-frame assembly with reduced thickness
GB2136200A (en) Cathode-ray tube shadow mask contour
US4045701A (en) Shadow mask supported by cathode ray tube faceplate
GB2097996A (en) Shadow mask support arrangement for a colour display tube
US4300071A (en) Four-corner shadow mask suspension system for television cathode ray tubes
EP0146926B1 (en) Shadow mask type color picture tube
GB1485856A (en) Cathode-ray tube
US3872345A (en) Colour picture tubes
US4583022A (en) Color picture tube having shadow mask with specific curvature and column aperture spacing
GB2151074A (en) Colour display tube and display device comprising such a colour display tube
US3601650A (en) Integrated shadow mask structure
TW460893B (en) Color selection means for color display tubes and color display tubes provided with the same
US3936691A (en) Color cathode ray tube frame-color selection electrode support structure
JP2534165B2 (en) Color video tube
JPH0660822A (en) Cathod-ray tube
GB2151075A (en) Display tube and picture display device comprising such a display tube
GB2151076A (en) Colour display tube
GB1534733A (en) Cathode ray tube
US4691138A (en) Color picture tube having shadow mask with varied aperture column spacing
US4164682A (en) Shadow mask suspension system having bracket means integrally formed from the shadow mask assembly
US3873875A (en) Temperature compensating parallax barrier supporting system for color cathode ray tubes
US3931540A (en) Shadow mask assembly
US3754157A (en) Stepped bimetallic shadow mask mounting element
US6013975A (en) Color display tube having a shadow mask

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19971203